Data retention with time travel and fail-safe
This document describes time travel and fail-safe data retention windows for datasets. During the time travel and fail-safe periods, data that you have changed or deleted in any table in the dataset continues to be stored in case you need to recover it.
Time travel
You can access data from any point within the time travel window, which covers the past seven days by default. Time travel lets you query data that was updated or deleted, restore a table or dataset that was deleted, or restore a table that expired.
Configure the time travel window
You can set the duration of the time travel window, from a minimum of two days to a maximum of seven days. Seven days is the default. You set the time travel window at the dataset level, which then applies to all of the tables within the dataset. A project-level default can also be configured.
You can configure the time travel window to be longer in cases where it is important to have a longer time to recover updated or deleted data, and to be shorter where it isn't required. Using a shorter time travel window lets you save on storage costs when using the physical storage billing model. These savings don't apply when using the logical storage billing model.
For more information on how the storage billing model affects cost, see Billing.
How the time travel window affects table and dataset recovery
A deleted table or dataset uses the time travel window duration that was in effect at the time of deletion.
For example, if you have a time travel window duration of two days and then increase the duration to seven days, tables deleted before that change are still only recoverable for two days. Similarly, if you have a time travel window duration of five days and you reduce that duration to three days, any tables that were deleted before the change are still recoverable for five days.
Because time travel windows are set at the dataset level, you can't change the time travel window of a deleted dataset until it is undeleted.
If you reduce the time travel window duration, delete a table, and then realize that you need a longer period of recoverability for that data, you can create a snapshot of the table from a point in time prior to the table deletion. You must do this while the deleted table is still recoverable. For more information, see Create a table snapshot using time travel.
Specify a time travel window
You can use the Google Cloud console, the bq command-line tool, or the BigQuery API to specify the time travel window for a dataset.
For instructions on how to specify the time travel window for a new dataset, see Create datasets.
For instructions on how to update the time travel window for an existing dataset, see Update time travel windows.
If the timestamp specifies a time outside time travel window, or from before the table was created, then the query fails and returns an error like the following:
TableID
was created at time which is before its allowed time travel intervaltimestamp
. Creation time:timestamp
Time travel and row-level access
If a table has, or has had, row-level access policies, then only a table administrator can access historical data for the table.
The following Identity and Access Management (IAM) permission is required:
Permission | Resource |
---|---|
bigquery.rowAccessPolicies.overrideTimeTravelRestrictions
|
The table whose historical data is being accessed |
The following BigQuery role provides the required permission:
Role | Resource |
---|---|
roles/bigquery.admin
|
The table whose historical data is being accessed |
The bigquery.rowAccessPolicies.overrideTimeTravelRestrictions
permission
can't be added to a custom role.
Run the following command to get the equivalent Unix epoch time:
date -d '2023-08-04 16:00:34.456789Z' +%s000
Replace the UNIX epoch time
1691164834000
received from the previous command in the bq command-line tool. Run the following command to restore a copy of the deleted tabledeletedTableID
in another tablerestoredTable
, within the same datasetmyDatasetID
:bq cp myProjectID:myDatasetID.deletedTableID@1691164834000 myProjectID:myDatasetID.restoredTable
Fail-safe
BigQuery provides a fail-safe period. During the fail-safe period, deleted data is automatically retained for an additional seven days after the time travel window, so that the data is available for emergency recovery. Data is recoverable at the table level. Data is recovered for a table from the point in time represented by the timestamp of when that table was deleted. The fail-safe period is not configurable.
You can't query or directly recover data in fail-safe storage. To recover data from fail-safe storage, contact Cloud Customer Care.
Billing
If you set your storage billing model to use physical bytes, you are billed separately for the bytes used for time travel and fail-safe storage. Time travel and fail-safe storage are charged at the active physical storage rate. You can configure the time travel window to balance storage costs with your data retention needs.
If you set your storage billing model to use logical bytes, the total storage costs for time travel and fail-safe storage are included in the base rate that you are charged.
The following table show a comparison of physical and logical storage costs:
Billing model | What do you pay for? |
---|---|
Physical (compressed) storage |
|
Logical (uncompressed) storage (default setting) |
|
If you use physical storage, you can see the bytes used by time travel and
fail-safe by looking at the TIME_TRAVEL_PHYSICAL_BYTES
and
FAIL_SAFE_PHYSICAL_BYTES
columns in the
TABLE_STORAGE
and
TABLE_STORAGE_BY_ORGANIZATION
views. For an example of how to use one of these views to estimate your costs,
see
Forecast storage billing.
Storage costs apply for time travel and fail-safe data, but you are only billed if data storage fees don't apply elsewhere in BigQuery. The following details apply:
- When a table is created, there is no time travel or fail-safe storage cost.
- If data is changed or deleted, then you are charged for the storage of the changed or deleted data saved by time travel during the time travel window and the fail-safe period. This is similar to the storage pricing for table snapshots and clones.
Data retention example
The following table shows how deleted or changed data moves between storage retention windows. This example shows a situation where the total active storage is 200 GiB and 50 GiB is deleted with a time travel window of seven days:
Day 0 | Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | Day 5 | Day 6 | Day 7 | Day 8 | Day 9 | Day 10 | Day 11 | Day 12 | Day 13 | Day 14 | Day 15 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Active storage | 200 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 | 150 |
Time travel storage | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | |||||||||
Fail-safe storage | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 | 50 |
Deleting data from long-term physical storage works in the same way.
Limitations
- Time travel only provides access to historical data for the duration of the time travel window. To preserve table data for non-emergency purposes for longer than the time travel window, use table snapshots.
- If a table has, or has previously had, row-level access policies, then time travel can only be used by table administrators. For more information, see Time travel and row-level access.
- Time travel does not restore table metadata.
- Time travel is not supported in the following table types:
- External tables
- Temporary cached query result tables
- Temporary session tables
- Temporary multi-statement tables
- Tables listed under external datasets.
What's next
- Learn how to query and recover time travel data.
- Learn more about table snapshots.